Mon1 Jan01:00am(15 mins)
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Shaped by the Moscow underground artistic scene of the 1970s and 1980s, Vladimir Sorokin has emerged as one of the most successful literary practitioners of Russian Conceptualism. He is well-known for depicting scenes of violence and abjection as a means of criticizing the Russian state and culture past, present, and (alt-) future. Although one of the main concerns of Conceptualist artists in Boris Groys’ view was to offer a critique of Russian messianism – that is, the concept that Russia has a unique, global spiritual role to fulfill – Sorokin’s texts as a response to this phenomenon, and his use of religious images and motifs, are not well-analyzed features of his work.
In this talk, adapted from a chapter of my doctoral dissertation, I discuss Sorokin’s novel Roman (1994) and the Ice trilogy (2002-2005) as a response to Russian messianism. I analyze what I propose are messiah figures in the texts, arguing that Sorokin uses this figure to challenge and undermine ideas of messianism found in the late Soviet and post-Soviet landscape. Sorokin has declared his novels are always concerned with the question of salvation, and I argue that the messiah figure features prominently in his work and is highly subversive in character. Ultimately, this figure is unable to serve in a salvific capacity and functions instead as a critique of the messianist idea in Soviet and contemporary Russian culture.